Although Americans are concerned about a number of national
security threats, a strong plurality (41 percent) believe that North
Korea currently poses the greatest immediate danger to the United
States, emerging as a more urgent concern than ISIS (28 percent) or
Russia (18 percent), according to the poll, which was conducted online
from July 10 through July 14.
While concerns about Russian meddling in the 2016 election have divided
the country in recent months, Democrats and Republicans agree that North
Korea is the most urgent threat. Among Democrats and
Democratic-leaners, 42 percent say North Korea is the most immediate
threat, and a similar number of Republicans and Republican-leaners (45
percent) agree.
North Korea has emerged as a flashpoint for the current
administration, as tensions have rapidly escalated since President
Donald Trump took office. In the past few months, North Korea has
conducted multiple missile tests — with the most recent provocation involving a ballistic missile with the range to reach Alaska.
Americans also are feeling much more concerned about North Korea
compared to just a year ago. Three in 5 Americans (59 percent) say they
currently feel less safe from the North Korea threat compared to how
they felt the previous year.
As the administration continues to weigh its options, a
majority of Americans (59 percent) believe the United States should
mostly use diplomacy over military force. In an April interview, Trump said the United States would "love to solve things diplomatically, but it's very difficult."
"There is a chance we could end up having a major, major conflict with North Korea," Trump said.
The administration has said all options remain on the table.
Opinions about how the United States should deal with North Korea differ sharply by party, the poll found.
Democrats and Democratic-leaners are the most likely group to favor a
diplomatic route (76 percent), and a strong majority of independents
would also prefer diplomacy over military action (65 percent).
Republicans and Republican-leaners are slightly more split, but a
majority say the United States should mostly use military action (56
percent).
Of those who say North Korea poses the greatest immediate threat, 80
percent are very or somewhat worried that the United States will become
engaged in a major war within the next four years. The NBC News|SurveyMonkey poll was conducted online from July 10 through July
14, 2017, among a national sample of 5,347 adults. Respondents for this
non-probability survey were selected from the nearly 3 million people
who take surveys on the SurveyMonkey platform each day. Results have an
error estimate of plus or minus 2.1 percentage points. For full results
and methodology, click here.
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